Treating attitudes toward impeachment as static was one of the biggest mistakes of the pundit class.
— Mark Palko (@MarkPalko1) September 28, 2019
In 1900, railroad engineer John Watkins predicted what the world would look like in 2000. He got a *lot* right. pic.twitter.com/EQYkaQ1rhD
— Jordan Chase-Young (@jachaseyoung) September 27, 2019
Three counties. 11,000 square miles. One doctor.
Stellar reporting by @elisaslow and the @washingtonpost. https://t.co/he5yeCll6c
— Brett Kelman (@BrettKelman) September 29, 2019
We reached the credulity plateau. https://t.co/76bgXOuMIl
— Mark Palko (@MarkPalko1) September 28, 2019
Since 2013 there has been a fivefold increase in the farmland being used for solar power generation = source of relief for hardpressed American farmers. https://t.co/hKtxREpYjf pic.twitter.com/azsobB5IAK
— Adam Tooze (@adam_tooze) September 26, 2019
I know I hammer this a lot, but because of their place in the journalistic ecosystem, it is important to note that NPR and the New York Times are consistently among the worst offenders here
— Mark Palko (@MarkPalko1) September 23, 2019
Today I woke up and realized the company that built the apartments next door left hundreds of visual proofs that (a+b)² = a²+2ab+b² hidden on the windows! pic.twitter.com/eK9NqptfCs
— Luis Batalha π΅πΉπΊπΈ (@luismbat) September 29, 2019
Kickstarter has a real problem on its hands. Also, an entirely foreseeable and preventable one. https://t.co/05Pr2tkYIl
— Felix Salmon (@felixsalmon) September 29, 2019
We'll be coming back to this one.
Hmm. It’s not that long. I read it in the parking lot at Office Depot this afternoon. https://t.co/CwIWWl0Xd2
— Pete Souza (@PeteSouza) September 27, 2019
No comments:
Post a Comment